It
has been a real intense couple of weeks. I’ve traveled more or less all over
the country, had a whole bunch of training, a whole bunch of reuniting and
merry-making, and eishe am I happy to see my little village again.
Two
weeks ago, I was in Maun (the biggest town within six hours from me) for a very
intense grant writing workshop, hosted by aid organization SAREP. One of our
PCV Leaders invited a group of us from the Delta region to attend along with
several organizations to help each organization write a (hopefully successful)
grant. This also means that I was able to spend the last week with super fast
internet, a shower, and grocery stores, which was quite a treat.
Most
PCVs were paired with organizations at random; I was lucky enough that an organization
that I had already been working with was also invited to the workshop. The
Ngamiland Basket Weavers Trust is an organization that I have worked a little
with, based in the Etsha villages. They are a group of weavers composed
primarily of women, so it has been fantastic to work with an organization
focusing on women and income generation. They want to host a workshop in the
region and wanted SAREP’s help, so we spent one very intense day writing a
grant proposal.
It
was probably the most hectic, intense work day that I have had in Botswana. It
was like writing the paper the night before it’s due, plus there is a language
barrier and you’re working with two other people to figure out exactly what
they want and then put it into words. It was exhausting, but in the end we were
pretty happy with the proposal and we all learned a lot about the grant writing
process.
Then,
one long bus ride and an even longer, though hilarious, hitch later, In-Service
Training came in Gaborone. All of Bots 12 intake group came together for a
little over a week of training and enjoying each other’s company in the capital
city. There were a lot of sessions- some helpful and some atrocious. On the
good end, I got a ton of ideas for activities and improving things we're already
doing, and on the other hand, we learned just how terrible the NACA (HIV/AIDS
on the national level) is. It was wonderful and a little bit crazy being back
with the Bots 12 family, but I am certainly happy to be in the village again.
No comments:
Post a Comment